The drawing, a pen on brown-tinted paper, heightened with white is located at the Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe. A stream of fire of the dragon appears to penetrate the pudenda of the young woman. The young woman is holding on to a liana of a tree, the end of the liana enters the dragon's tale. The drawing also features two babies (cupids), one near the snout of the dragon, another is holding on to its tail.

Paul Rumsey reads the contents of the dragon's snout as a "jet of flame, the heat of lust. She stokes one end of the dragon with her staff and proffers her rump to the dragon so that it can heat up her genitals. She is aided in this task by the two cupids, one who steadies the tail for the stoking, the other holds the dragons head by the nostrils to direct the flame."